I've been wondering lately how one measures the success of a particular writing project.
As a writer, I would like to see my work on a book shelf, television or cinema screen, but in acknowledging that I am a writer, which is a creative occupation, I am also implying that I am not a business person, or an accountant or a legal expert. Which I'm not.
But, particularily, I would suggest, for television and film, a project cannot get to broadcast or to movie theatres without the work of many other disciplines.
As a writer, does one judge a project to be a success once it has been sold to a production company, because that is essentially the end of the purely creative process, or is it only a success if it is eventially made and broadcast?
I struggle with the latter definition as it ceases to be a primarily creative work and is reliant upon the casting, the production budget, the whims of the commisioners, who else is doing what else at the same time, ie all things that are beyond the control of the writer.
Essentially, should I continue to beat myself up about the lack of success until the credits are rolling at the end of the first series? But then, what if there's no second series?
What if it's critically acclaimed but no one watches it?
What if 7 million regularily tune in but it gets panned on a BSG forum and you are too embarassed to tell anyone what it is that you wrote that is funding your Aston Martin?
Or will I never be happy with the situation so should quit now and become an organic chicken farmer?
Does anyone have a benchmark for success?